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1931 Colleens make hockey history

colleens

    Drumheller has a storied history of hockey, starting with the Drumheller Miners and the Fabulous Bentley brothers, right up to the 1966 Allan Cup Champions. There were also the Falcons, which made to the AJHL finals in the 1974-75 season, and today’s Drumheller Dragons.
    However there is one more team that can be mentioned in the same breath, and that is the Howlett Colleens.
    The Colleens, an all-female hockey team, managed by Whitehouse Hotel owner Percy “Shorty” Howlett, captured the imagination of the valley when they won the 1931 Intermediate Provincial Hockey Championship. That year they defeated the Edmonton Jasper Park Hustlers in a two-game series to capture the title.
    Former resident Betty Baier, now of Vancouver, shared a photo of the championship team and some newspaper clippings from the era of the Colleens. Her sister Marge Grant was a star player on the team. She later went on to play with the Calgary Tigerettes who played out of the Victoria Arena.
    The Colleens were the darlings of Drumheller during those seasons, and garnered headlines for their play on the ice.  Other recognizable names on the squad included Annie Gammie, Isa Brown and Bunty Brown.
    It was a very different time for female sports, and this was emblematic in the language and the coverage. For just as many stories about the team’s on-ice performance, there were references to their beauty and female charms.  
    Annually the team would travel to the Banff Winter Festival to play and would come home stars, making headlines when they were included in the newsreels played at the talkies at the Napier Theatre.
    In fact, in 1932 the Queen of the Carnival was Margaret Nicol, and the team posed as “Banff Bathing Beauties” in the hot springs for cameramen.
     To get the annual festival they held dances to fundraise for the trip.
    Also reflective of the times, in the January 30, 1930, edition of The Mail, a fan poem was printed extolling the team’s virtues, opening:

    “Drumheller has a hockey team
Composed of maidens fair.
And a sweeter aggregation
Cannot be found elsewhere.”

    The provincial championship was not just a flash in the pan. The girls in green and white made it to the championship in 1932 but lost the Coffey Memorial Cup to the Red Deer Amazons 4-0.
    The Colleens were busy in the off-season as well and hit field to play softball. In 1933, they went on a tour of the province playing teams from all over. The also competed in the provincial junior champion that year. After defeating  Craigmyle, they went on to play the Morrin Flyers, but lost. The Flyers went on to win provincials, behind the pitching of Ellen Hoy.
    While The Mail could not discern whatever happened to the Colleens, their short-lived legacy certainly provided some noteriety for the Drumheller valley.
    If any resident knows more about the history of the Howlett Colleens, email news@drumhellermail.com


Going neck-and-neck with a plesiosaur at this week’s Speaker Series

Nagesan March2
The March 2 session of the 2017 Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series is a presentation by Ramon Nagesan, Education and Preparation Lab Liaison at the Royal Tyrrell Museum, entitled “Move Over Nessie! Neck Mobility in Plesiosaurs, the Long-Necked Marine Reptiles of the Mesozoic.”

Long-necked plesiosaurs are extinct marine reptiles that lived at the same time as dinosaurs. These marine reptiles were unlike anything that had evolved previously, and nothing like them has evolved since. To understand the ecological role they may have filled, it is important to study the function of one of their most dramatic features: the extremely long neck. In some groups, such as Albertonectes, there may be upwards of 76 cervical vertebrae.

To put this in perspective, a mammal has only seven! Their long neck may have played an important role in how these plesiosaurs interacted with their environment.

In his talk, Nagesan will explain how he deduced the function of the neck of an exemplar long-necked plesiosaur, Nichollssaura borealis, using three-dimensional (3D) modelling and comparative anatomy. 3D modelling techniques, including CT scanning and 3D digital photogrammetry, are making their way to the forefront of palaeontological research. They can be used in a variety of circumstances to achieve research, conservation, and display objectives on specimens.

The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. They are held every Thursday until April 27 at 11:00 a.m. in the Museum auditorium. Past Speaker Series talks are also available on the Museum’s YouTube channel: youtube.com/user/RoyalTyrrellMuseum

Delia community promotes healthy living

Walk the Walk celebration

Recently, Delia and surrounding communities completed Walk the Wall Fitness Challenge.
    On November 21, 2016, The Delia Library and Delia Jazzercise challenged the community to walk the length of the Wall of China for a combined total of 26,495,000 steps in 63 days. The challenge was put into action to motivate community members to keep active and promote healthy living.
    Nine teams, which included 70 members, rose to the challenge and together they walked a total of 347,209,460 steps, far surpassing their goal.
    Annette Steinbrecker with 1,474,090 steps and Nicole Devaleriola with 1,11,300 steps were awarded top stepper. The top team of the challenge were the Happy Feet with a total of 5,987,257 steps between team members.


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